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As our understanding of cancer has grown, medical oncology has evolved as a subspecialty of internal medicine since the 1960s. Initially, few treatments beyond surgery and a handful of toxic chemotherapy agents were available to cancer patients. Medical oncologists now have hundreds of chemotherapeutic agents and hundreds of targeted agents ranging from small molecules to monoclonal antibodies to genetically engineered cellular therapy to choose from for hundreds of separate diseases, with countless new agents in development.
The primary tool of the medical oncologist is chemotherapy; however, cancer treatment is best accomplished when a multidisciplinary approach is used. The medical oncologist must work closely with the surgical oncologist, radiation oncologist, radiologist, pathologist, and primary care physician.
The medical oncologist is typically involved in the final decisions concerning management, and frequently coordinates implementation of these decisions. The decision whether to take a curatively aggressive or a palliative measured approach, or to transition from one approach to another, decisions about the timing of localized therapies, such as surgery and radiotherapy, and the decision regarding therapy is required or whether supportive care is most appropriate are often made by the medical oncologist. The oncologist must also strike the balance between expected treatment sequelae and potential to cure. If there is a reasonable expectation for cure, treatment-related toxicity becomes more acceptable. If there is a reasonable expectation for prolonging survival or improving quality of life, some toxicity is acceptable. If the chance of significantly altering the course of the disease is low, most oncologists and their patients will feel that only minimal toxicity is acceptable, but these decisions are based on individualized conversations weighing the unique situation of each patient and his or her family.
As medicine, nutrition, and improved sanitation continue to further extend the average life expectancy, more people are surviving long enough to develop a malignancy. Thankfully, this is being tempered with an overall decrease in the incidence of and mortality from the most common cancers.
Cancer screening has become a routine part of the health maintenance performed on healthy individuals. Mammograms, fecal occult blood tests, colonoscopy, Papanicolaou smear, and digital rectal examinations have the potential to detect a malignancy at an early, asymptomatic stage and perhaps change the disease outcome. With increased screening, more early-stage, potentially curable cancers are being detected. Many of these cancers are amenable to local therapy (surgery and/or radiation), but a large portion continue to require systemic therapy.
In most cancers, only 20% to 40% of cells are active at any one time, which explains why the doubling time for a tumor is significantly longer than the duration of a single cell cycle. Tumor growth would be exponential if all cells were dividing, or constant if the fraction of actively cycling cells remained fixed; however, this does not correspond to clinically observed tumor doubling times. In 1825, Benjamin Gompertz described the nonexponential growth pattern of disease that he observed in cancer patients. He noted that the doubling time increased steadily as the tumor grew larger, a phenomenon now described as Gompertzian growth. This has been postulated to occur owing to decreased cell production, possibly related to relative lack of oxygen and of growth factors in the central portion of the large mass. A smaller tumor, conversely, would have a larger portion of actively cycling cells and, thus, be potentially more sensitive to cytotoxic chemotherapy.
A clinically or radiographically detectible tumor that measures at least 1 cm in diameter already contains 10 8 to 10 9 cells and weighs approximately 1 g. If derived from a single progenitor cell, it would have undergone at least 30 doublings before detection. Further growth to a potentially lethal mass would only take 10 further doublings. Thus, the clinically apparent portion of the growth of the tumor represents only a fraction of the total life history of the tumor. Given the long period of time during which growth of the tumor can go undetected, occult micrometastases have often developed by the time of diagnosis.
Cytotoxic chemotherapy has the ability to kill more cancer cells than normal tissue, likely because of impaired DNA damage repair mechanisms in the former. This is relevant because most cytotoxic agents damage actively cycling cells. Typically, the more aggressive the cancer, the higher the proportion of its tumor cells that are in active phases of the cell cycle.
As a result of the enhanced efficacy of chemotherapy against rapidly dividing malignant cells, rapidly proliferating cancers that, in the past, were associated with shorter survival may have a better chance for cure from systemic chemotherapy than more indolent disease, as long as the tumor cells are sensitive to the chemotherapeutic agents. An example of this paradox is Burkitt lymphoma, which is sensitive to chemotherapeutic agents and is curable in the majority of patients, despite having an extremely rapid proliferation rate. Conversely, a slow-growing follicular lymphoma, even when sensitive to chemotherapy as defined by the complete disappearance of the tumor, will relapse and ultimately cause death.
Early studies of the ability of chemotherapy to kill cancer cells were conducted in leukemia cell lines in the 1960s. These studies noted log-kill kinetics, meaning if 99% of cells were killed, tumor cell number would decrease from 10 10 to 10 8 or from 10 5 to 10 3 , for example. The fraction of cells killed was proportional, regardless of tumor size; thus, even though a given treatment would appear to have eradicated the tumor, both clinically and radiographically, there would be a high probability of residual cells that would eventually proliferate and show up as a clinically evident tumor (relapse). One explanation for the achievement of sustainable complete remission following this argument would be that other factors such as host immune response may be important at low levels of residual tumoral cells.
Clinical prognostic models are, in part, based on risk of disease relapse and thus take into account features that might suggest micrometastatic undetectable disease at the time of diagnosis. As an example, a large tumor may suggest a longer clinically silent tumor lifetime or a higher doubling rate. Clinically apparent nodal involvement demonstrates that the tumor has gained the capability to spread, at least regionally.
If the decision is made that the patient will benefit from chemotherapy, the treatment strategy devised by the medical oncologist will be largely determined by the stage of the cancer. The initial medical treatment of cancer can be thought of as requiring (1) preoperative (neoadjuvant) chemotherapy, (2) postoperative (adjuvant) chemotherapy, or (3) chemotherapy without localized therapy, either for metastatic, inoperable disease (attributed to locally advanced stage and/or comorbid medical conditions) or a hematologic malignancy. Chemotherapy without surgical therapy was historically thought of as a palliative measure; however, improved efficacy of chemotherapy and radiotherapy is changing this notion. Many hematologic and epithelial malignancies are now approached in curative fashion with chemotherapy alone or combined with radiotherapy.
When the first chemotherapies were developed, they were used only in patients with advanced disease who were failing other therapies. This was largely because of poor efficacy of therapy, and chemotherapy in this setting was usually associated with significant treatment-related morbidity. The therapeutic index (benefit opposed to morbidity) and associated supportive care measures of chemotherapy today tip this balance in favor of treating patients earlier, even with no objective evidence of postsurgical disease.
Miraculous progress has been made in surgical and radiotherapeutic treatments for localized disease; however, many cancers have metastatic spread at diagnosis. Surgically or radiotherapeutically treated tumors may fail locally, but they often recur at distant sites. When considering the previously discussed undetectable period of tumor growth, it becomes apparent how a completely resected tumor may have significant occult residual disease, either locally or at distant sites. In this situation, chemotherapy is given as an adjuvant to augment the effect of surgery; hence the name adjuvant chemotherapy. Many patients who receive adjuvant therapy are without evidence of disease after local therapy. The pathologic margins of surgical specimens may be negative, and imaging may reveal no abnormality; however, significant relapse potential from residual local disease or micrometastases may exist. Adjuvant therapy aims to eradicate this subclinical disease before it reaches a critical threshold at which cure becomes difficult. Breast, lung, and colon cancer are a few examples of the many cancers that benefit from adjuvant therapy.
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